In Pennsylvania, a buyer's order only becomes consummated once the buyer has taken delivery of the vehicle. Not at the signing, but once the vehicle leaves the sellers property.
On the purchase of a vehicle you cannot cancel the contract as the Cooling Off Period or Buyers Remorse law does not apply to the purchase of a vehicle. You signed the contract and are legally bound to honor it.
House buyers need to read the contract, and know everything the contract ties them in to. And what the contract entitles them to. Also house buyers need to know the penalty for ending the contract early.
No, there is no buyers remorse law in any state covering the sale of an automobile. That law only applies to unsolicited sales.
None! Once you purchase a vehicle and sign the contract you cannot cancel the contract or return the vehicle. The buyers remorse or cooling off period laws do not apply to the purchase of an automobile in in the state. This is a myth that simply will not die.
No buyers remorse law in any state applies to the purchase of an automobile.
If you are asking is there a cooling off period or buyers remise law in Florida on the purchase of a used car the answer is no. Once you sign the contract you are legally bound to that contract and it cannot be cancelled unless the seller agrees to that cancelation. The Buyers Remorse or Cooling Off Period laws do not apply to the sale of a new or used vehicle in any state.
There is a lemon law, but no buyers remorse law on the books in NJ. Every car sold for more than 3,000 dollars and under 7 years old has to have a warranty. Once you sign a contract or buy a car in NJ, you are stuck with that car.
You must have bought --- or entered into a binding contract to buy --- a principal residence on or before April 30, 2010.If you entered into a binding contract by April 30, 2010, you must close (go to settlement) on the home on or before Sept. 30, 2010Go to the IRS gov website and use the search box for First-Time Homebuyer Credit
No, there is no buyers remorse law in any state covering the sale of an automobile. That law only applies to unsolicited sales.
This question is specific to the buyers contract, you should reference that document to answer this question.
Yes, it is a contract. You agree to pay the price, plus the additional buyers fee when you bid.
There is no time frame. Once a car is signed for it is now legally bound to the new owner. Unless the written contract specifies a special return clause there is no law stating a car may be returned due to buyers remorse.